Amazon and Jeff Bezos are on top of the world

Think you’ve had a busy week so far? It’s nothing compared to what Jeff Bezos and Amazon have accomplished.

In just the past month, Amazon rolled out a new feature on its app that makes it easier for shoppers overseas to buy products from the United States, announced a deal to sell Fire TV sets with Best Buy and revealed it has more than 100 million Prime members.

Bezos personally owns the Washington Post and is competing against Musk’s SpaceX in the rocket race with his own company Blue Origin.

Amazon’s continued success is all the more remarkable considering that the company has been a frequent Twitter target of President Trump.

Trump has made misleading claims about Amazon not paying taxes, complained about the break that Amazon gets on shipping rates from the Postal Service, and he has argued that Amazon is the main reason so many struggling retailers are going out of business.

It’s hard not to consider Trump’s gripes as a proxy for his displeasure with how he and the rest of his administration are being covered by the Washington Post.

Bezos seemed to take the high road in the annual shareholder letter that he released. There were no mentions of Trump or Washington politics. (Bezos did tweet in 2015 about sending Trump into space on a Blue Origin rocket.)

And investors are, to put it mildly, extremely bullish on Amazon and are clearly not worried about Bezos being distracted. They are betting that the company will become increasingly dominant in retail (online and bricks-and-mortar), media and cloud computing.

Amazon’s stock rose 1.5% and is up nearly 35% this year. Shares are less than 4% below the record they hit last months.

The company is now worth more than $750 billion, making Amazon the second most valuable firm in the world — just ahead of Google owner Alphabet and Microsoft and trailing only Apple.